Tuesday, 25 September 2018
Wednesday, 5 September 2018
Teacher's Day Musings from Literature!
At the dawn of yet another delightful Teachers’ Day that acknowledges and celebrates
the power and the charm of the teacher, their esteem and their value, and how they
shape and mould and impact and influence their students for eternity, here’s a
small gleaning from some of literature’s most endearing teachers, both in
writers and in their writings.
I believe these personal literary
gleanings, would sure motivate all of us to becoming better teachers in the delightful
and noble service of dispelling the ‘darkness of ignorance’ from the students entrusted
in our noblest care, towards making them better human beings and better
citizens of this great nation.
Here’s wishing y’all a Happy teachers’
day and happy inspirational reading too!
Here goes -
1.
Teacher Recommends his prodigious Student Achebe!
In 1957, Achebe went to London to attend
the British Broadcasting Corporation Staff School. One of his teachers there
was the British novelist and literary critic Gilbert Phelps, who recommended Things Fall Apart for publication.
2. To
Amis, School life was more rewarding than even family life
To Kingsley Amis, thanks to his teachers,
his School was more rewarding than family life. Amis attended Norbury College,
where at the age of eleven he had his first story, ‘‘The Sacred Rhino of
Uganda,’’ published in the school magazine.
Amis writes enthusiastically about his
years at this excellent day school, recalling the broad range of social strata
from which its students were drawn and its humane spirit of tolerance: ‘‘I have
never in my life known a community where factions of any kind were less in
evidence, where differences of class, upbringing, income group and religion
counted for so little.’’ Academic standards were high, and Amis, specializing
first in classics and then in English, maintained a level that earned him a
scholarship to St. John’s College, Oxford.
3. Aristotle,
the “most brilliant student” of his master Plato!
Teacher
nicknames student as ‘the reader’!
At age seventeen, Aristotle was sent to
Athens to attend the most famous school in Greece, the Academy of the great
philosopher Plato. At the time, Athens was the intellectual center of the
world, and Plato’s Academy was the center of Athens.
Aristotle won recognition as the master’s
most brilliant student, and his energetic gathering of research and general
love of books led Plato to nickname him ‘‘the reader.’’ During his time at the
Academy, Aristotle studied mathematics and dialectic, a form of argumentative
reasoning. Aristotle spent twenty years at the Academy, until Plato’s death in
347 B.C.
4. Camus
inspired to read widely by his teacher
Albert Camus was greatly inspired to read
widely and deeply by his high school teacher, philosopher Jean Grenier, Camus
was well versed in the classics of Western philosophy, including the works of
Plato, SΓΈren Kierkegaard, and Friedrich Nietzsche—all of whom influenced his
work.
5. Chesterton
says, ‘I prefer to change society through my teaching’
As a literary journalist, Chesterton was
very much in the tradition of the Victorian sage. He was at once a teacher and
a literary artist. He sought to change society through his teaching, using
symbol, parable, and religious allegory as the most effective way of doing so. Like
his close friends George Bernard Shaw and H. G. Wells, he preferred the role of
teacher and prophet to that of literary man.
6. Plato’s
Treatise in honour of his Teacher
The Republic
is a philosophical treatise by Plato. In this text, Plato outlines much of the
political theory of his teacher, Socrates.
7. For
Dahl, it will be harsh memories of school days!
Roald Dahl recalled in his short
autobiographical story ‘‘Lucky Break’’ that the ‘‘beatings at Repton were more fierce and more frequent than
anything I had yet experienced.’’ Standing six feet, six inches tall, Dahl played
soccer and served as the captain of the squash and handball teams but did not
excel in academics. One teacher commented on the fourteen-year-old boy’s
English composition work: ‘‘I have never met a boy who so persistently writes
the exact opposite of what he means. He seems incapable of marshaling his thoughts
on paper.’’
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)